Destiny developer Bungie is ditching Activision after 8 years

Destiny developer Bungie is ditching Activision after 8 years

Bellevue, Washington-based game studio Bungie – which created the massively popular Halo and Destiny franchises – is parting ways with its publisher, Activision, after eight years together. It’s keeping the rights to Destiny, though.

The company, which has been around since 1991, noted in a blog post that it’s now “ready to publish on our own, while Activision will increase their focus on owned IP projects.” While its official statements make it sound like an amicable break-up, Kotaku reported that the two firms have been going through a rough patch for a while now, owing to Destiny 2: Forsaken failing to meet Activision’s sales expectations, and Bungie tiring of its publisher‘s demand for new titles or expansions every year.

For its part, Bungie has more Destiny content in the works, and the game will continue to run on Blizzard‘s Battle.net platform. In addition, it’s working on an entirely new title, but it hasn’t yet revealed any details about that. The project is supported by a $100 million investment from Chinese gaming firm NetEase.

It’s worth noting that Bungie was previously owned by Microsoft, until it split from the Redmond giant in 2007 – so it appears that the team enjoys being independent of publisher demands. That said, it’s now in bed with NetEase, and it remains to be seen how that relationship develops over the next few years. Hopefully, this is the right call for the company at this point in time.